إِنَّا لِلَّهِ وَإِنَّا إِلَيْهِ رَاجِعُونَ
Find a loved one’s
resting place
Search graves across UK Muslim cemeteries — or check burial availability near you when you need it most. Free for families, always.
Free, no account needed. What to do when someone passes
Free for families
Everything here costs you nothing.
Grief should never meet a paywall. Searching, discovering, remembering — free, with no advertising, indefinitely.
Grave search
Search by name — English or Arabic transliteration — across every cemetery on the platform, and walk straight to the plot with the map.
Search graves →UK cemetery directory
51 Muslim cemeteries and dedicated Muslim sections across the UK — addresses, websites, and satellite maps aligned to the Qibla so you can see the burial rows face Makkah.
Browse the directory →The janazah guide
What to do in the first hours and days after a Muslim loved one passes in the UK — registration, the green form, the burial itself — step by step, in plain words.
Read the guide →Memorial pages & tributes
Families manage their loved one's memorial — biography, verses, family connections, Sadaqah Jariyah — and moderate tributes left by visitors. No charge, no ads, no photos by design.
Manage a memorial →Try it now
Walk the cemetery from where you are.
This is Gardens of Peace, live. Click any raised plot in the brothers’ or sisters’ section to open a memorial — the person’s name in English and Arabic, the years they lived, and the exact plot reference so you can find it on foot.
Interactive cemetery map
See the cemetery in 3D.
We don’t load the map until you ask — saves data, and keeps the page calm.
Inside a memorial page
Twelve sections, each privacy-controlled by the family.
Every section can be set to public, family-only, or hidden. The family owns the memorial — the cemetery and platform only host it.
Header
Full name, Arabic name, dates in both Gregorian and Hijri.
Plot location
Embedded map in our “Quiet” style, walking directions from the entrance.
Biography
Family-written life story with a quiet rich-text editor.
Early life
Where they were born, parents, siblings, journey.
Family connections
Structured relationships that link across cemeteries on the platform.
Career and community
Profession, contributions, mosques and charities served.
Verses and du’as
Quranic verses and du’as the family selects, in Arabic and English.
Sadaqah Jariyah
Vetted charity nominations. Continuous good deeds in their name.
Grave maintenance
Optional contributions to the cemetery for plot upkeep.
Tributes
Text-only condolences, moderated by the family.
Visit log
Aggregate visitor count, privacy-preserving, family can disable.
Sharing
Print-ready cards, text-only Open Graph image, WhatsApp/email/social links.
Frequently asked
Questions families ask us.
- Does any of this cost my family money?
- No. Searching, memorial pages, tributes, the cemetery directory, and the guide are free for families, with no advertising — indefinitely. Cemeteries pay for their office software; you never pay to remember.
- Why are there no photos of the deceased?
- It follows traditional Islamic guidance on imagery. A memorial built around words — the life story, family connections, and the verses the family chooses — endures better than a single photograph.
- Who controls my loved one's memorial page?
- The family. Every section can be public, family-only, or hidden, and tributes from visitors only appear after the family approves them. The cemetery and the platform only host it.
- What is Sadaqah Jariyah on a memorial?
- The family can nominate vetted charities so visitors can give continuous charity in the deceased's name. Donations go to the charity in full — Dafn Registry takes nothing from them.
- My loved one's cemetery isn't on here. What can I do?
- The directory still lists it if it's a UK Muslim cemetery — and you can tell the cemetery about us. Memorial pages and grave search switch on when the cemetery joins, which is free for them to start.
إِنَّا لِلَّهِ وَإِنَّا إِلَيْهِ رَاجِعُونَ
Someone you’re looking for?
Start with their name. If they rest at a cemetery on the platform, you’ll find them — and the path to their grave.
Run a cemetery? See Dafn Registry for cemeteries →